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Oxford University Press (OUP), Journal of Petrology, 4(49), p. 697-715

DOI: 10.1093/petrology/egm080

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Boninites and Adakites from the Northern Termination of the Tonga Trench: Implications for Adakite Petrogenesis

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Adakitic rocks were recovered by dredging from the northern termina- tion of the Tonga Trench during the 1984 voyage of the R.V. Natsushima and the 1996 voyage of the R.V. Melville. These con- tain magmatic zircons that have been dated at 2� 5M a by U^Pb methods, indicating that they are contemporaneous with boninite magmatism previously described from this area. This is the first time adakites and high-Ca boninites have been reported from the same active tectonic setting. The Tonga adakites are classified as high-SiO2 adakites, and are compositionally consistent with an origin as partial melts of subducted Pacific oceanic crust and sedi- ment. Geochemical modelling suggests that the adakites are not involved in the petrogenesis of the Tongan high-Ca boninites. However, the recovery of adakites and boninites from the termination of the northern Tonga Trench suggests that both magma types are related to the unique tectonic setting of this region, where a transition from steep subduction to a transform fault plate boundary has created a slab window with an associated slab edge. Boninites are generated as a result of hot Samoan plume mantle moving through the slab window and subsequently being fluxed by H2O-rich fluids from the subducting Pacific oceanic crust. The Tonga adakites, in contrast, result from the direct melting of the slab edge as a result of the juxtaposition of the subducting slab against hot mantle derived from the Samoan plume.